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Membrane Filtration

Author/Compiled by

Félicien Mazille (Aquasis, cewas, international centre for water management services)

Dorothee Spuhler (seecon international gmbh)

Executive Summary

Membranes are thin and porous sheets of material able to separate contaminants from water when a driving force is applied. Once considered a viable technology only for desalination, membrane processes are increasingly employed in both drinking water and wastewater treatment for removal of bacteria and other microorganisms, particulate material, micropollutants, and natural organic material, which can impart colour, tastes, and odours to the water and react with disinfectants to form disinfection by-products (DBP). As advancements are made in membrane production and module design, capital and operating costs continue to decline.

Advantages

High performance

Compact units: less space needed than conventional treatment schemes

Simple operation

Membranes available can be used to separate many kinds of contaminants

Membranes emerged as a viable means of water purification in the 1960s with the development of high performance synthetic membranes. Implementation of membranes for water treatment has progressed using more advanced membranes made from new materials and employed in various configurations. An increasing scarcity in fresh water sources fuelled a push towards alternative resources such as ocean water.

Photography of membrane modules used for water treatment (left) and hollow fibres (right). Source: Reisch (2007)

Membranes are becoming increasingly popular for production of potable drinking water from ground, surface and seawater sources, as well as for the advanced treatment of wastewater and desalination.

Scheme of membrane filtration : during ultrafiltration all particles and pathogenic microorganisms are retained on a porous membrane while water and dissolved salts pass through Source: EAWAG (n.y.).

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Membrane modules

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Adapted from SAGLE & FREEMAN (2004)

There are four main types of modules: plate-and-frame, tubular, spiral wound, and hollow fibre. The plate-and-frame module is the simplest configuration, consisting of two end plates, the flat sheet membrane, and spacers. In tubular modules, the membrane is often on the inside of a tube, and the feed solution is pumped through the tube. The most popular module in industry for nanofiltration or reverse osmosis membranes is the spiral wound module. This module has a flat sheet membrane wrapped around a perforated permeate collection tube. The feed flows on one side of the membrane. Permeate is collected on the other side of the membrane and spirals in towards the centre collection tube.

Hollow fibre modules used for seawater desalination consist of bundles of hollow fibres in a pressure vessel. They can have a shell-side feed configuration where the feed passes along the outside of the fibres and exits the fibre ends. Hollow fibre modules can also be used in a bore-side feed configuration where the feed is circulated through the fibres. Hollow fibres employed for wastewater treatment and in membrane bioreactors are not always used in pressure vessels. Bundles of fibres can be suspended in the feed solution and the permeate is collected from one end of the fibres.

Membrane module designs. Source: SINCERO & SINCERO (2003)

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Types of membranes

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Adapted from SAGLE & FREEMAN (2004)

Water treatment processes employ several types of membranes. They include microfiltration (M-F), ultrafiltration (U-F), reverse osmosis (R-O), and nanofiltration (N-F) membranes. Microfiltration membranes have the largest pore size and typically reject large particles and various microorganisms. Ultrafiltration membranes have smaller pores than microfiltration membranes and therefore, in addition to large particles and microorganisms, they can reject bacteria and soluble macromolecules such as proteins. Reverse osmosis membranes are effectively non-porous and, therefore, exclude particles and even many low molar mass species such as salt ions, organics, etc. Nanofiltration membranes are relatively new and are sometimes called “loose” reverse osmosis membranes. They are porous membranes, but since the pores are on the order of ten angstroms or less, they exhibit performance between that of reverse osmosis and ultrafiltration membranes.

Filtration spectrum of reverse osmosis, nanofiltration, ultrafiltration, microfiltration and particulate filtration relative to the pore size of the common material. Source: RADCLIFF and ZARNADZE(2004)

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Membrane materials

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Adapted from SAGLE & FREEMAN (2004)

Most membranes are synthetic organic polymers (e.g. polysulfone, cellulose acetate). Microfiltration and ultrafiltration membranes are often made from the same materials, but they are prepared under different membrane formation conditions so that different pore sizes are produced.

Membranes can also be prepared from inorganic materials such as ceramics or metals. Ceramic membranes are microporous, thermally stable, chemically resistant, and often used for microfiltration. However, disadvantages such as high cost and mechanical fragility have hindered their widespread use. Metallic membranes are often made of stainless steel and can be very finely porous. Their main application is in gas separations, but they can also be used for water filtration at high temperatures or as a membrane support.

The current tendency on membrane development is to use nanofunctionalised membranes. Polymer membranes doped with silver nanoparticles to avoid biofouling is an example of such modern membranes (PRONK 2011).

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Membrane fouling

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Adapted from WIKIPEDIA (2012)

Membrane fouling is a process where solute or particles deposit onto amembrane surface or into membrane pores in a way that degrades the membrane's performance. It is a major obstacle to the widespread use of this technology. Membrane fouling can cause severe flux decline and affect the quality of the water produced. Severe fouling may require intense chemical cleaning or membrane replacement. This increases the operating costs of a treatment plant. There are various types of poulants: colloidal (clays, flocs), biological (bacteria, fungi), organic (oils, polyelectrolytes, humics) and scaling (mineral precipitates).

Fouling can be divided into reversible and irreversible fouling based on the attachment strength of particles to the membrane surface. Reversible fouling can be removed by a strong shear force of backwashing. Formation of a strong matrix of fouling layer with the solute during a continuous filtration process will result in reversible fouling being transformed into an irreversible fouling layer. Irreversible fouling is the strong attachment of particles, which cannot be removed by physical cleaning.

Eawag, KWB and Opalium conceived a membrane-based small-scale system that can operate without crossflow, backflush, aeration or chemical cleaning. Equipped with a biosand filter as pretreatment, it is designed to be robust, energy-sufficient (gravity-driven) and run with restricted chemical intervention (only residual chlorine). As a sole operational requirement, the membrane reactor is simply to be emptied on daily to weekly basis to superficially remove the material retained by the membrane and accumulated in the module. Otherwise, the system, which is only driven by a 40 cm differential pressure head (i.e. 40 mbar), is totally self-sustained and autonomous.

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Operation and maintenance

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Adapted from AMTA (2007)

Raw water quality must be reviewed frequently and operational parameters of the membrane treatment train should be continually trended and compared to original start up conditions. Pretreatment efficiencies and post treatment works should also be monitored closely. These tasks can alert operators of pending problems in time for corrective action to occur before production capabilities are impacted. While some changes in the treatment process may not significantly impact plant productivity or finished water quality, they may result in membrane degradation, more frequent cleaning, and generally higher operating costs over time if not properly addressed.

When treatment or equipment failures become apparent, it is critical that adequate maintenance resources are made available. As with any industrial facility, routine preventive maintenance activities should be performed prudently as scheduled, while responsiveness to unforeseen repairs also needs to be timely. Unlike other treatment technologies, which produce lower quality product as the raw water quality degrades, membrane systems produce consistent water quality while the systems themselves degrade.

Therefore, early detection of raw water changes and making adjustments to the operational parameters to accommodate the changes are the key to successful plant operation. A well-designed plant should include the necessary “tools” and have proper and adequate provisions for conducting routine tests and inspections. Such provisions include a well-equipped laboratory, tools and provisions for testing, and sample points for profiling.

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Costs

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Membrane filtration systems’ capital costs, on a basis of dollars per volume of installed treatment capacity, do not escalate rapidly as plant size decreases. This factor makes membranes quite attractive for small systems. In addition, for groundwater sources that do not need pretreatment, membrane technologies are relatively simple to install, and the systems require little more than a feed pump, a cleaning pump, the membrane modules, and some holding tanks.

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At a glance

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Working principle

Pollutants are separated as water is forced to pass through the membrane.

Capacity/adequacy

Simple but high-tech.

Performance

Excellent separation capacity.

Costs

Relatively low operation costs.

Self-help compatibility

Process can be automatised but operators required for the control.

O&M

Membranes have to be backwashed on a regular basis to avoid fouling and to increase their lifetime.

Membrane processes have become more attractive for potable water production and advanced wastewater treatment in recent years due to the increased stringency of regulations, water scarcity, and decreasing costs of membranes. Membrane processes have excellent separation capabilities and show promise for meeting many of the existing and anticipated drinking water standards (TECHBRIEF 1999).

Membrane processes are very versatile: for example ultrafiltration and microfiltration are efficient for turbidity suspended particles and microbial removal, nanofiltration and ultrafiltration membranes for organics (e.g. DBP precursors, micropollutants) and viruses separation, and reverse osmosis process for desalination and removal of small size organic contaminants.

This publication describes a green process based on a double membrane technology combining a microfiltration based membrane bioreactor and ultrafiltration to treat micro-polluted source water in drinking water treatment.

This article outlines some key features of these membrane-based technologies and describes how they can be adapted to supply safe drinking water in remote communities and rural regions from the developing world.

FARCY, M.
; DOUCOURE, A.
(2010):
Membrane Systems for the Fight against Water-Borne Contaminants in Small Communities and Remote Areas from the Developing World: Accomplishments in Thailand and Some New Development in Sénégal and Mali .
In: The Open Biology Journal:
Volume 3
, 74-80.
URL
[Accessed: 22.05.2019]

This case study outlines the activities of an engineering consulting firm that has been contracted to submit a preliminary design for a new water treatment plant for a rural community in Nova Scotia, Canada.

Microfiltration membrane technology provides a unique design solution for small communities (up to 10 000 people). This is especially true in remote locations where space and personnel are limited and where environmental considerations restrict or prohibit chemical and/or sludge disposal.

This document describes the use of membranes in removing pathogens, other particles, and organic matter from traditional supplies; desalting lower-quality sources such as brackish groundwater and seawater; and treating municipal water wastewater for non-potable use.